Western Short StoryMountain JusticeB.S. Dunn

Western Short Story

Dan Pearson kicked out the fire and cursed the cold. A
small column of brown smoke flecked with glittering orange sparks
floated up into the bitter morning air. He pulled the collar of his
slicker higher trying to keep out the biting autumn chill. It was
only a matter of time before the first snows would fall in this part
of Wyoming and he wanted to be out of the high country before that
happened.

Dan wasn't a big man, he stood a touch over five and a
half feet in his socks. His collar length hair was brown and shaggy,
most of it hidden away under a black, low-crowned hat. His face was
deeply tanned, almost leathery, and made him look somewhat older than
his thirty years. It did however, give him a ruggedly handsome
appearance which many women found alluring.

Pearson shivered again as the insidious cold crept
beneath his slicker and through his woollen shirt. Tall pines and
cedar blocked out the morning sun's warmth and the heavy air caused
the wood smoke from his now defunct camp fire to drift like a blanket
of fog halfway up the trunks of the tall rough-barked trees.

A creature of habit, Pearson checked the loads in his
single-action Colt army model and then the Winchester which was
chambered for a .45-.75 cartridge.

Finding everything in order, Pearson mounted his
buckskin mare, and with slight knee pressure, the horse moved off in
a slow walk, picking its way along the narrow, winding trail towards
the town of Woodsville.

#

It was late morning when the mountain trail opened out
into a lush alpine meadow bordered by immense ponderosa pines and
giant cedars. West of the town a stand of silver barked aspen
sparkled, leaves of gold and orange standing out against a back drop
of green.

In the midst of it all, situated on the banks of a
fast-flowing mountain stream, was the town of Woodsville.

Woodsville had humble beginnings as a lumber camp. Trees
were felled in the mountains and the stripped logs freighted down
from the camp to the timber mills at the foot of the range.

The discovery of gold some twelve months later saw the
camp boom with an influx of miners keen to make their fortune. The
rush lasted three years before the last of the placer mines played
out and the miners left. In their wake was left a town that struggled
to survive.

An English timber man, Edward Fox, had made his fortune
selling milled lumber to the miners. Though little was known about
him, rumour had it that many years before he'd gone into exile from
his native homeland after the suspicious murder of his wife and her
lover. Though in reality, nobody actually knew.

Fox and his son had arrived with the first miners. He
brought machinery and men with him and soon after, had his
lumberjacks felling in the best stands. He supplied timber hand over
fist to the miners at exorbitant prices.

Other timber companies saw an opportunity for themselves
to come in and take a share of the profits but Fox would have none of
it. The first time a rival company tried to move machines into the
high country, the freighters were ambushed and the equipment
destroyed. It was a single ill-fated attempt.

Therein Fox found another way to make money. He offered
to buy ready-to-mill logs from his opposition, at a substantially
reduced price.

Of course the deal was refused. Rather than sell to Fox,
they chose to keep freighting it down out of the mountains. Once
again, it was tried only once. From then on, they were at the mercy
of Edward Fox.

After the miners left, Fox's profits slumped, but the
“entrepreneur”, as he referred to himself, was not one to stand
idly by and let money escape his grasp. He began to buy the most
lucrative businesses in Woodsville and once more was making money.

Pearson reined up on the outskirts of town and reached
into his shirt pocket and pulled out a nickel-plated star and pinned
it to his chest, high and on the left side.

He'd worn it for the past two years in a small town
called Tawny Creek. Tired of wandering, he'd looked for an
opportunity to settle down, and Tawny Creek had provided that for
him.

Pearson leaned forward and rubbed his horse between the
ears. “I guess this is it girl. Let's ride in and get it done.”

#

Pearson's first stop was the livery stable. Not much
more than a large barn, it had double doors at both ends and a corral
out the back. The hostler's name was Orville. He was a middle-aged
man with grey hair and a limp courtesy of a Reb mini-ball.

“What can I do for you stranger?” Orville asked
warmly while Pearson was tethering the buckskin to a wobbly
hitch-rail.

Pearson turned around and the hostler noticed the badge.

He swallowed hard and his warm demeanour shifted to one
of nervousness. “What can I do for you sheriff?”

“A stall for the night if you've got one?”

“Sure, no problem,” Orville answered. “People
around here call me Orville. Are you just passin' through sheriff?”

The hostler's face fell. “No, I didn't think you were.
The stall will be four bits for the night.”

“With feed and rub down?”

“Feed is included, but it'll cost you an extra two
bits for the rub down.”

Pearson nodded. “Fine.”

After the horse was stabled Pearson said, “I'm lookin'
for two men. One rides a paint and the other rides a chestnut. Do you
know of anyone around here who forks broncs like that?”

Orville shook his head but his eyes gave him away.
“Nope, I don't know anyone around here who rides them kinda horses.
Come to think of it I don't think I've ever seen any such horses like
that in town, ever.”

“That's funny,” Pearson said, “because I was told
I could find 'em here in Woodsville.”

The hostler shook his head vigorously. “Nope. Whom
ever told you that must've been drunk when they told you that. Yes
sir, blamed drunk.”

The next time Pearson spoke, his voice possessed an
edge. “Is everybody in town runnin' scared like you?”

An indignant expression came over the hostler's face,
all but fleeting. He knew what Pearson meant, but denied it anyway.

“What do you mean?” Orville asked, refusing to meet
the lawman's eyes.

“You know what I mean,” Pearson snapped. “You also
know who I'm after and that they blamed well live here in town.”

“Sheriff, I know nothin'.”

“You mean you choose to know nothin,” Pearson
scolded him as he would a child. “Where can I find the local law?”

“The jail is about halfway along main street on your
left,” Orville informed him. “It won't do you any good.”

“Why?” Pearson asked harshly.

Orville didn't answer. He turned and limped away.

#

Pearson entered the law office and found the sheriff
sitting behind a scarred, dark timber desk, drinking a steaming mug
of coffee laced with rotgut whiskey.

Pearson stood in front of the desk. “My name's
Pearson. I'm the sheriff of Tawny Creek. It's a small town south of
here. I'm lookin' for two men who robbed the Tawny Creek stage and
killed the driver and messenger. They stole four thousand dollars
from the strong box the Concorde was carryin'.”

Pearson could tell from the expression on the lawman's
face that he knew exactly who Pearson meant even without mentioning
names.

The sheriff was an overweight man who looked as though
he'd not moved from his chair in years. His puffy face had turned a
pale sickly colour.

“I'm sheriff James,” he croaked. “If there is any
way I can help, just ask.”

Pearson knew that there was no heart in the offer.

“The men I'm after live here,” he said, knowing he
didn't need to add the last bit of information. “One rides a paint
and the other a chestnut. Do you know 'em?”

“Nope. Never heard of 'em,” James answered with a
shake of his head.

“You too sheriff?”

All he got in return was a puzzled look.

“Hell James, you know who I'm talkin' about. Let's see
if this jogs your memory. Jonathan Fox and his pard Abilene. They
were the two who hit the stage and did the killin'. I'm here to take
'em back for trial, so you can either help me or stay the hell out of
my way.”

Pearson paused briefly then continued. “I've been here
five minutes and it's not hard to tell that Edward Fox has this town
buffaloed. So tell me, where can I find 'em?”

“I … I don't know where they are,” the fat man
stammered.

Pearson's eyes grew flinty. “So that's how it's going
to be is it?”

“You could try the saloon across the street,” James
said acting as if he was being helpful. “The Crosscut it's called.
They could be there.”

“Yeah, I'll do that,” Pearson said icily. “Thanks
for all your help.”

With that the Tawny Creek sheriff turned on his heel and
stalked out the door.

#

James waited until he saw Pearson enter the saloon
before he rushed from his office and lumbered along the street to the
office of Fox and Son.

Edward Fox sat at a large, finely hand-tooled cedar
desk, in a leather upholstered chair. His son, Jonathan sat on a
lounge along a side wall, with his cohort Abilene. A pot-bellied
stove in the far corner emitted sufficient heat to warm the room.

Fox senior was a thin man with fine, grey hair which was
immaculately groomed. He was a man who exuded an aura of great
confidence.

Junior was a younger version of the same while Abilene
was an average looking young man with lake blue eyes, blond hair and
a right arm that could pull a six-gun in the blink of an eye.

“What can we do for our esteemed peace officer today?”
the elder Fox asked in a voice that dripped sarcasm.

“You got a problem that just rode into town,” the
big man gasped out and pointed at the young men on the lounge.
“Actually it's you two who have the problem.”

Jonathan and Abilene gave him a questioning look.

“What the hell do you mean?” Jonathan snapped.

“Well, just lately I had noticed you two have been
flashin' money around town. More than usual and today a lawman from
down Tawny Creek shows up with a story about a stage heist and
lookin' for you two.”

The two young men remained silent.

Edward Fox looked over at them, his eyes narrowed with
his rage.

“What have you two gone and done now?” he hissed.

His son shrugged nonchalantly. “When we went and took
care of that business for you we picked up a little spendin' money
along the way. Nothin' much.”

Fox's face turned crimson,.“Of all the stupid, idiotic
things to do. What the hell were you two idiots thinking?”

“They killed the driver and the shotgun messenger
too,” James put in.

“Watch your mouth fat man,” Abilene warned.

“Shut up!” Fox exploded. “I can't believe that the
pair of you thought that I wouldn't find out. And now your stupidity
has brought outside law here.”

Abilene leapt to his feet, drew his Colt .45 and checked
its loads.

“Where is he?” he asked staring hard at James. “I'll
fix the problem right now.”

“He went over to the Crosscut,” the sheriff
answered.

Fox held up a gnarled hand. “Just hold up. You two
have caused enough trouble. I'll sort this out. Meanwhile, you two go
up to the cabin at Deep Creek and lay low. Don't come back to town
until I send for you.”

The two young men left and Fox turned his steely gaze on
the sheriff. “Go and find Wells for me. Tell him I have a job for
him and have him meet me at my house.”

#

When Pearson entered the saloon, most patrons turned to
stare at the stranger with the badge pinned to his chest. The room
went silent for a time before the noise levels returned to normal
once again.

Pearson looked about from his position just inside the
bat-wing doors. A sawdust covered plank floor held round tables with
scarred tops which were scattered throughout the room. The bar was
constructed of hardwood and stretched across most of the width of the
room while a long rectangle mirror on the rear wall sat above shelves
of bottles.

Percentage girls were ensconced on the knees of
customers, encouraging them to part with more money, while the faro
table appeared busy.

Pearson weaved his way through the crowd as he crossed
the smoke filled room and bellied up to the bar.

“What'll it be sheriff?” the short barkeep asked.
“Beer or whiskey?”

Pearson shook his head, “Neither. I'm lookin' for
Jonathan Fox; know where I can find him?”

The barkeep stared blankly at the Tawny Creek sheriff.
Without a word he turned and walked away to a spot further down the
bar where he started to clean glasses with a stained rag.

“I'm lookin' for Jonathan Fox and his pard Abilene,”
he shouted. “They robbed a stage and killed two men. Do any of you
know where I can find them?”

Every person in the room ignored him. It was as if
Pearson wasn't there.

“Hell!” he cursed and stormed out.

#

The next place of call was the Fox and Son office but it
was locked up and the blinds pulled. More frustration.

For the rest of the day Pearson tried various other
establishments, under the watchful eye of townsfolk too afraid to
talk, for the same result. Finally he gave up in disgust after his
belly told him it was time to eat. He would go to Fox's office the
following morning and see what he had to say.

It was just on dark when Pearson found himself a small
eatery on a side street that was run by a widow woman and her
daughter.

Inside there was enough room for ten tables, no more.
Each table was covered with a white table cloth and had two chairs.
Clean cutlery sat on the table tops, along with starched napkins.

Although the place was small, Pearson thought that
somebody took great pains to look after their patrons.

The room was filled with mouth-watering aromas and by
the time Pearson sat down at the only available table, his stomach
was kicking up a storm.

He ordered a plate of stew and potatoes, followed by
home made dumplings. Without a doubt, it was certainly the best home
cooked meal he'd had in a long while.

Pearson was halfway through his second cup of coffee
when the widow woman's daughter sat in the chair opposite him.

She was thin, plain looking but not unattractive, her
long brown hair tied back in a ponytail. It quickly struck him that
she was not the young girl he'd thought she was. She was in every way
a young woman.

Pearson's mug stopped halfway to his lips as he waited
on an explanation for the intrusion. The young lady had a look of
uncertainty on her face and the Tawny Creek sheriff thought that she
might have changed her mind and stand up before she spoke a word.

In a soft voice she asked, “Are you planning on taking
Jon and Abilene back with you mister?”

“That's the idea,” he replied.

“Are you going to take them back alive or are you
going to shoot them?”

Pearson was puzzled. “Why is it you want to know
ma'am?”

“Peggy.”

“Pardon ma'am?”

“My name is Peggy,” she informed him. “But if
you're planning on taking them back alive that means old man Fox will
try to stop you. And you might have to kill him. That would please me
no end.”

Pearson's face, although taken aback at the harshness
that Peggy's voice held, remained passive.

“I'm sorry,” she hurriedly apologised. “But you
can't blame me for hoping. After all, that man is responsible for
the death of my father, and now you show up. A real man who might be
the only hope of breaking the choke hold that man has on this town.”

“I'm sorry about your Pa,” Pearson said quietly.
“But my job here is to bring in the ones responsible for the stage
robbery and deaths of two men. If Fox comes between me and my duty
then I'll deal with him. But if he leaves me be, then that's all I'll
do. I'm not somebody's avenging angel. Besides, hate is a heavy
burden to be carryin' around.”

Peggy remained silent for a while then she stood up, the
chair scraped on the floorboards as it moved back. She brushed at the
front of her floral apron and moved around the table to where she
could reach the empty bowl the dumplings had been in.

“You might try the company cabin up on Deep Creek,”
she whispered. “It's four miles north of here.”

When she turned and walked back to the kitchen, Peggy
could feel his eyes on her, and that made her smile.

#

Pearson remembered seeing a hotel on his way around town
and walked toward it along the dusty boardwalk, dim lantern light
cast a dull orange glow across his path.

He pulled the collar on his jacket higher as the chilled
night air bit sharply into his exposed skin. As his boots clunked
along on the boards, Peggy's words played over and over in his head.
He would take a look at the cabin in the morning. If the pair were
there, they wouldn't be going anywhere in a hurry.

Pearson stepped down into the street to cross it when
thunder filled the night air and the muzzle flash from a rifle lit an
alley across the way.

A burning pain lanced across his left side as a bullet
scored a deep furrow over his ribs. The force of it spun him around
and Pearson collapsed to his knees.

Instinct took over and he drew his Colt, turned stiffly,
raised his gun and fired at the darkened alley.

The bushwhacker fired again and dirt kicked up to
Pearson's left. Pearson fired at the muzzle flash, two shots and was
rewarded with a cry of alarm.

Ignoring the pain in his side Pearson leapt to his feet
and ran across the street. He took cover up against the front wall of
the mercantile and then edged his way along to the mouth of the
alley.

No more gunfire sounded so Pearson cautiously entered
the dark alley and found the bushwhacker laying in the shadows.
Pearson knelt down beside the body and felt for a pulse. There was
none. Whoever this man was, he was dead.

People started to gather around the mouth of the alley
and it wasn't long before the sheriff arrived on the scene blowing
hard from his exertions.

“What the blazes is goin' on?” he gasped out. “Well
Pearson?”

Pearson pointed at the dark shadow of the dead man on
the ground. “It would seem that this here feller wanted to blow a
few holes in me.”

“Has somebody got a light?” Sheriff James asked.

A tall, slim man stepped out of the crowd holding a
lantern at shoulder height. He held it above the dead bushwhacker so
his face was visible.

“It's Shorty Wells,” murmured a man in the crowd.

The lucky shot from Pearson's Colt had hit the man high
in the chest, killing him.

“Who's Shorty Wells?” Pearson asked James.

“He's um … he's nobody,” James said hesitantly.
“He's just a bum.”

Pearson had been lied to all day and now he'd been
ambushed. He'd had enough. With a fluid motion his Colt appeared in
his hand. He raised it so the barrel poked up under the lawman's
double chin.

“Who's Shorty Wells?”

There was a murmur from the crowd.

“He's … he's a man who works for Mr Fox,”
stammered James.

Pearson holstered his six-gun. “See, now wasn't that
easy?”

The Tawny Creek sheriff shouldered his way through the
crowd and once he was clear, stopped to examine his bloody side. When
he looked up Peggy stood before him. She took him by the arm. “Come
with me and I'll fix that for you.”

“What are you doin' here?”

“I heard the shooting,” she explained. “I knew it
was you.”

“Yeah well, you shouldn't have come.”

“Whatever,” she shrugged. “Come with me.”

Pearson allowed himself to be led away by Peggy. She was
beginning to interest him very much.

#

“There you go, all done.”

Peggy stood back and admired her work.

Pearson sat on a kitchen chair in the home of his nurse.
With no shirt on, even with the small wood stove burning, he was
beginning to feel the cold.

Peggy had cleaned his wound, put some salve on it and
then bandaged it tight to help stop the bleeding.

“Well, I guess I'll be goin'. Thanks for the
doctorin'.”

Peggy put a hand on his shoulder and said, “Wait here
a minute.” And then she disappeared.

A few minutes later she returned with blankets and a
pillow.

“What's all this?” Pearson asked hesitantly.

She dumped it all in Pearson's arms and said, “We have
a spare room out the back. You'll be sleeping there.”

Pearson opened his mouth to protest but Peggy cut him
off.

“It's fine. It was ma's idea. She couldn't see a
problem with it, you being a sheriff and all. So breakfast is at
seven. Don't be late.”

Peggy turned and left the room, leaving Pearson sitting
there stunned.

#

The following morning sheriff James was in the office of
Edward Fox, and the latter was not happy.

“That bastard was lucky last night,” Fox fumed.
“I've never known Shorty to miss.”

“That's just it,” said James, “he did and now he's
dead because of it.”

Fox sat in his big leather chair and remained silent,
deep in thought. He looked up at James.

“Sheriff, you're looking a little pale,” he
observed. “I suggest a short trip out of town is in order. Before
the first snow sets in.”

James was slow to realise that what he was being told
was not an option.

“I feel fine Mr Fox. Never felt better.”

Fox sighed heavily at the lawman's inability to
comprehend what he was hearing. “Do I have to spell it out for you?
Pearson is fast becoming a problem and I can only see one way of
getting rid of him. And that is by going at him hard. I don't think
you want to be around for that.”

It finally dawned on James what Fox was alluding to.
“Oh.”

“So, have you seen him this morning or not?” Fox
asked the sheriff.

James shook his head, “Nope. I ain't seen hide nor
hair of him since last night.”

Fox frowned. “I wonder where he is.”

#

Pearson had risen before dawn that chilled morning and
foregone breakfast to get an early start up to Deep Creek. His side
was stiff and a little sore but he knew that would be fine.

Orville was up and about, curious as to what Pearson was
doing about so early.

“You're up early this mornin',” he observed.

“Yep.”

“How's the wound?”

“Sore.”

“Leavin' town?”

“Nope.”

“Goin' far?”

Pearson turned away from tightening the cinch on his
saddle and stared hard at the hostler, “If I told you where I was
goin' would you run down and tell Fox?”

“Hell no,” Orville said indignantly.

“Well then, I'm goin' out to …”

The hostler held up a gnarled hand. “Hold it there. I
ain't so sure I want to know.”

“Orville, what happened to your leg?” Pearson asked.

The hostler was taken aback at the question but after a
brief silence he answered the question.

“Took a Reb minnie ball at Gettysburg,” he
explained. “It smashed my leg. Field surgeon wanted to take it off
but a friend of mine wouldn't let him.”

Pearson digested the information then asked, “How come
a feller like you puts up with Fox? Surely you're not scared of him?
Not after goin' through what you have.”

Orville opened his mouth to vent a stern rebuke but no
words spilled out. Instead his mouth snapped shut like a steel trap.

Pearson mounted his horse and rode off into the cold,
mist-filled morning, leaving the hostler contemplating what he'd
said.

#

The cabin stood deep in the trees on a patch of dirt
just big enough for the log constructed building. From its stone
chimney drifted a thin column of white smoke. Out back was a small,
rough-built corral with two horses standing hip-shot at the rail.
Growing from its centre was a large pine.

As Pearson sat watching the cabin, the light mist which
hung between the trees started to lift. His horse was tied to a low
branch further back along the trail and he'd approached the cabin
through the dense timber.

It wasn't until he reached the cabin and positioned
himself under a window that he heard the voices inside.

“Man I hate sittin' around here doin' nothin'. Why
doesn't your old man let me at that son of a bitch and have done with
it.”

“Just be patient Abilene. He knows what he's doin'.
Maybe another day at most and he'll be dead and we can head on back
to town.”

Abilene mumbled something incoherent which Pearson
couldn't make out. Well at least they were there. Now he had to get
them out.

He thought of the corral, and an idea dawned on him.

#

“God damn it. The horses are loose,” Abilene's voice
cursed loudly.

The cabin door flew open and out tumbled the two wanted
young men.

“Hold it right there,” Pearson snapped as he eared
back the hammer on his Colt. “You two are under arrest.”

Abilene swore and went for his gun. A foolish move for
his pistol never even cleared leather before the hammer on Pearson's
six-gun fell.

The Colt roared loudly in the still morning air and the
slug took Abilene high in the left of his chest. He cried out as he
reeled back and crashed to the damp earth. His gun still in its
holster unfired, and a growing patch of red on his coat.

Pearson shifted his aim to cover Jonathan Fox who stood
transfixed in shock, looking down at the lifeless body of his friend.

He looked up at the Tawny Creek sheriff, his face a mask
of rage. “You low down bastard.”

Pearson's .45 held rock steady in his fist. “Maybe,
but if you don't want to end up like your friend there, unbuckle your
gun-belt with your left hand and let it drop.”

Pearson watched as Fox did as he was ordered and there
was a dull thud when the gun-belt hit the earth.

“Right,” he said, “it's time to catch them horses.
Now move.”

“My Pa will kill you for this,” Jonathan Fox
snarled.

“Just shut up and move,” Pearson snapped. “You're
goin' to hang for what you and Abilene did, and I for one won't be
sheddin' any tears.”

#

When Pearson rode into town leading the two horses with
the younger Fox and the stiffening Abilene on them, people stopped to
stare in disbelief. To them, all the sheriff of Tawny Creek had
succeeded in doing was to sign his own death warrant.

Word spread like wildfire through the town and as the
horses were being tied at the hitch rail outside the jail, the news
reached Edward Fox.

Shortly after that, Fox sent word for all the hardcases
in his employ to assemble across the street in the Crosscut saloon.

Inside the jail, Pearson locked Jonathan Fox in an empty
cell in the back room and returned to the front office where he found
Orville waiting for him.

To his surprise, he was cradling a cut-off twelve gauge
shotgun.

“What are you doin' here?” he asked the hostler.

“I come to help.”

“Where's the sheriff?”

“He rode out this mornin',” Orville told him.
“Didn't say where he was goin', just that he had somethin' to do.”

Pearson nodded. “Convenient.”

“Yeah, mighty.”

There was a moment of silence before the hostler spoke
again. “Heard you brought in young Jon. Figured you might need some
help.”

“You do realise there is a good chance you'll get
yourself killed, don't you?” Pearson pointed out.

The hostler reached into his jacket pocket and pulled
out a battered old campaign hat and put it on.

“Why in hell did you bring him back here anyways?”
Orville asked. “Why not just keep ridin' down out of the
mountains?”

“You know Fox. How far do you think I'd get down the
mountain before him and his henchmen caught up?”

“Yeah, I see your point.”

Pearson walked over to the gun rack and broke the chain
that looped through the trigger guards of the weapons. He took down a
couple of Winchesters, a sawed-off shotgun and a Henry rifle. He left
an older army model Spencer and a '74 Sharps in the rack.

He placed the guns on the sheriff's desk, found some
ammunition and loaded them.

Pearson picked up one of the Winchesters and a spare box
of cartridges. He gave them to Orville and said, “You'll be needin'
them.”

“Pearson!” The voice called from out on the street.

“Looks like it's about to start,” observed Orville.

“Yeah, find yourself some cover beside the window on
the left.”

“It's Fox,” said Orville when he looked out.

Pearson scooped up his own rifle and hurried across to
the window on the right. He opened it and called back, “What do you
want Fox?”

Edward Fox stood in the middle of the main street
holding a rifle and flanked by two gunmen.

“You know what I want Pearson,” he bellowed. “Let
my boy go.”

“Can't do that.”

“The way I see it Pearson you have two choices. Let my
boy go or we'll kill you and that crippled old buzzard in there with
you. I have another ten men in the saloon just waiting to shoot you
dead. The choice is yours. I don't care either way. I'll give you
five minutes to decide.”

“You know he's goin' to kill us whether we let his son
go or not?” said Orville.

Pearson turned to the hostler and nodded. “We need to
get that desk on its side and put both it and the cabinet under the
windows for some protection. These walls are paper thin and won't
stop much.”

They'd just finished the task when, “Pearson!”

The Tawny Creek sheriff looked out into the street but
it was empty.

“Can you hear me Pearson?” The voice it seemed, was
coming from inside the saloon.

“I hear you.”

“Are you comin' out with my boy or do we start
shootin'?”

“I think you know the answer to that,” Pearson
called out. “Just remember we have your son in here. I'd hate for
him to get shot by a stray slug.”

“Well, maybe you can be persuaded by some other
means.”

A brief commotion across the street followed as Peggy
was shoved roughly through the bat-wings in front of a gunman.

“What do you say now? Send Jon out or my man shoots
the girl.” Fox shouted.

Pearson gave Orville a look of helplessness. “Will he
do it?”

The hostler nodded. “I do believe he would.”

Pearson shook his head. “I'm sorry Orville.”

“I understand,” he said trying to ease Pearson's
guilt. “Maybe we can take a few with us.”

“Come on Pearson, I'm tired of waiting.”

“Get him out Orville.”

When the young man came out of the back room he had a
smug look on his face. “I told you what would happen. Now once I'm
free my old man will kill the pair of you and I'll be ...”

Pearson stepped forward and drove his rifle butt
brutally into Jonathan Fox's middle, driving the air from him.

“You'll be hidin behind your father like the yeller
dog you are,” Pearson grated through clenched teeth. “Now get
your worthless carcass outside before I shoot you where you stand.”

Pearson and Orville went across to the windows as
Jonathan Fox walked outside. The street was empty in both directions
but there were men with rifles on the roof tops.

“Hold it right there kid,” Pearson said in a
menacing voice. “Hey Fox, here's your rotten offspring. You start
the girl and we'll start your son.”

There came the murmur of voices from the other side of
the street and Peggy slowly began the walk toward the jail.

“Who said I was wastin' it. I already got me two
fellers who won't be seein' another day.”

Pearson fired at a rifle barrel that protruded from a
shattered saloon window. His bullet gouged splinters from the
window's timber frame and sprayed the rifle owners face with the
slivers. His target reeled back, clawing at his face and exposed
himself. Pearson's rifle bucked against his shoulder again and this
time the slug took the man in the chest, and knocked him back out of
sight.

After another flurry of shots, the rifle fire ebbed and
then stopped.

“What do you figure they're up to?” A puzzled
Orville asked.

“Who knows. How many do you figure we've hit?”

“I've done for two,” Orville assured him. “I'd put
down a third as possible.”

“I think I've taken care of two,” Pearson said.

“How many you figure he's got over there?”

“I don't know,” Pearson shrugged. Then he called out
to Peggy. “Peggy are you okay?”

“I'm fine.”

“Do you know how many guns Fox has over there?”

“About a dozen I think,” came the distant reply.

“Is that with the guns he has on the roof tops,
Peggy?”

“I don't know about them.”

“Did you see 'em Orville?” Pearson asked the
hostler.

“Only the tops of their heads,” he explained. “But
I figure there could be another eight or nine guns up there.”

“Way too many for us to handle,” the Tawny Creek
sheriff allowed.

A new volley of gun fire erupted from the saloon and
eight men led by Jonathan Fox exploded through the bat-wings. They
fired rifles and six-guns as they started to cross the street to lay
down a deadly fusillade of fire.

When the attackers reached the centre of the main street
more gunfire erupted from the roof tops. The volume of fire coming
into the jail didn't increase. If anything, it dwindled.

Pearson poked his head up to take a quick look. Outside,
the attackers were in disarray. Six of the eight were down; the other
two were firing at the roof tops. Jonathan Fox lay motionless in the
street, most likely killed in the first volley.

It wasn't long before the remaining gunmen joined the
others.

An eerie silence fell across the town. Pearson and
Orville looked up at the rooftops and saw to their surprise that the
gunmen were townsfolk of Woodsville.

“It looks as though the good citizens have taken their
town back,” smiled Pearson.

“It sure do,” agreed the smiling hostler.

Peggy joined them and they walked outside and stood on
the boardwalk surveying the bloody scene before them.

“That would've been us if they hadn't bought in to the
fight,” Pearson allowed.

“Look out!” Peggy's cry of alarm drew their
attention to Edward Fox who'd stormed out of the Crosscut saloon,
six-gun in hand. He started firing erratically.

“I'll kill you, you son of a bitch!”

A bullet smacked into the wall behind Pearson while
another fanned his cheek. He didn't move. He didn't have to as
Orville swung up the Henry rifle and fired, levered and fired again.

The two slugs ripped into Fox who stopped in his tracks,
mouth agape. He staggered another step and tried to bring his gun
into line with the hostler. The weight of it in the hand of the
dying man was too much.

He took one more step and fell forward, dead. The town
of Woodsville truly was free.

#

Pearson stood beside his horse ready to leave.

“Thanks for your help Orville,” he said and he
thrust out his hand.

The hostler took it in a firm grip. A confident grip.
“No. Thank you. If it weren't for you I'd still be showin' yeller.
You take care of yourself.”

Orville walked off and only Peggy stood before him.

“Well I'd best be off.”

“I suppose so,” Peggy said quietly.

There was a brief silence and Pearson said, “If I was
to come back up here after the snow thaws do you think your Ma would
cook me one of her meals?”

Peggy smiled warmly. “I'm sure she would.”

She leant forward and kissed him lightly on the cheek.

“Goodbye,” she whispered in his ear.

When she drew back their eyes held for a short time
which Pearson broke as he turned and climbed into the saddle.

He looked down at her and touched the brim of his hat.

“Ma'am,” he said with a smile. Then he turned his
horse and rode out of town.